r HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher . NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IX. KIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1879. NO. 36. ns-B-saBB.BBBSBBBBBBBaBBaaMBBBBBBBaBM.,aBBBasBBnBBW . - t . ) f ; - H J V. it The Children. Do yon love me, little children? Ob, sweet blossoms! that are curled (Lite's tender morning-glories) Round the casement ot the world! Do your hearts olimb np toward me As my own heart bends to yoa, In the beaaty ot yonr dawning And the brightness ol your dew? When the fragrance oi yonr noes, And the rhythm ot yonr feet, And the incense oi yonr voioes Transform the sullen street, Do you see my soul move softly Forever where you move, With an eye ol benediction And a guarding band oi lore ? Oh, my darlings! I am with you In your trouble, in your play, In your sobbing aud your singing, In your dark aud in your day ; In the chambers where you nestle, In the hovels where you lie, In the sunlight where you blossom, And the blackness where you die. Not a blessing broods above you But it lilts me lrom the ground; Not a thistle-barb doth sting you But I suSbr with the wound; And a chord wiihin me trembles To your slightest touch or tone, And I famish when you hunger, And I shiver whon you moan. Can you tell mo, little children, Why it is I love you soT Why I'm weary with the burdens Of my sad and weary woeT Do the myrtle and the aloes Spring blithely lrom one troe T ' Yet I love you, ob, my darlings! Have you any flowers tor me T I have troddon all the space. Oi my solemn years alone, And have never lelt tho cooing Of a babe's breath near my own; Bat with more than lather passion, And more than mother pain, I have loved you, little childien! Do ) on love me buck aain ? THE SOAP WOMAN. It is doubtful if tlie judge would have felt us much surprised to hear his wife ayhe wits going to make a voyage to Europe as to hear her say she was going to mike soap. They had not been vitj long married then, mid the judge wa. not yet conversant with the full cata logue of that thoroughly home-made woman's accomplishments.' She had been one of the live daughters of a widow, left while her children were wee bit girls in very straitened circumstances. The way the mother reared them up to a true and useful womanhood was a marvel of perseverance, industry- and coonomy. She managed to have them well educated for the times, and saw them all married into the best circles and occupying positions of respectabil ity and influence. Judge Manotte's wife-was the youngest of the widow's daughters, and it was thought she had made the best match of the live. The judge's place was the pleasantcst itf the thrifty village, which has pince assumed tho more ambitious name of city. He had been gently born and raised, went early to college, and from thence to his profession as a lawyer. Manual toil was a stranger to him, yet he was a man of industry, in no sense given to profuse ness of expenditure. lie approved and admired his wife's general prudence in housekeeping and spoke with pride to his guests of the excellent food with which his board was spread as the work of her own hands. Mrs. Manotte might have kept servants. I think the judge would have been better satisfied if sSe would have had a girl (all the ladies of her position had one or more), but she declared with decision, pretty early in their wedded life, that she would not be bothered with servants as long as she had health to do her own work. The exercise was no more than she needed for her own benefit. Mrs. Manotte had a will and way of her own, as this little tale will bear abundant evidence. The judge made this discovery pretty early, lie could doubtless make a moving; plea in a court room, but he was aware he could make no plea to move his wife when she was fully bent upon a certain course. . But yet when Mrs. Manotte, over the breakfast tahlo of a fair April morning, announced her intention of making a barrel of soft soap, the judce looked as if stricken with a sudden palsy. I doubt he would have worn a more ructui e had his best lawsuit gone against m. ' And I hope you will help me all you can," added the earnest woman, on thoughts of economy, ashes and grease intent. " Indeed, I can render you no assist ance whatever!" returned the judge, in sharper tones than his wife had ever heard him speak before. Her calm blue eyes surveyed him with unruffled com posure, but there was not in look or bearing one symptom of wavering from her purpose. - " Then I must go about the job alone," she said quietly. " I beg vou will do nothing ofthe kind." continued tho judge, something very like a frown contracting his brow j "I am perfectly willing to buy all the soap we need, and what use should we have for the vile, sloppy stuff!" " Soft soap was good enough for my mother, and it is good enough for her daughter," said Mrs. Manotte, with a dignity approaching sternness. "I shall make no vile, sloppy stuff, but an article far more efficacious for cleansing clothes and for vaiious household pur poses, than anything - to bo bought at stores. Are you aware how much money we paid out for soap last year, Mr. Manotte?" " No," said the judge, "and it doesn't matter." " Indeed, I think it does matter," said the wife. " However much money peo- fle may have, they are never justified n wasting it. So I hope you will call at the grocer's as you go down this morning, and see if you can procure three molasses hogsheads " "Three molasses hogsheads!" ex claimed the judge in a tone of mingled terror and dismay, "do you then pro pose to manufacture the article by wholesale? I shall next be invited to peddle soft soap by tho gallon from door to door." The wife laughed gleefully at her hus band's rueful apprehensions, and asked: r " Don't you know that I must set up a leech?" "A leech, in old parlance, nipans an understrapper ol a doctor," said the judge, moodily. " Well, I mean a mash-tub," returned Mrs. Manotte. "Perhaps two hogs heads will answer, one for the ashes, the other to hold the soap." The judge went out without further words ; his wife did not know whether he would heed her request or not, but rather thought he would. She was right in this supposition. Within an hour a dray dumped two hogsheads and a tight barrel in the back yard. Mrs. Manotte at once attired herself in a short, stout dress, a long, black poke bonnet, shut up the front of the house and retired to the scene of her proposed labors. She drew a pair of her hus bandls old leather gloves on to her hands, adjusted some blocks of wood, and trundled a hogshead into position. Then she arranged some bricks in the bottom of it, and covered them with straw, that the lye from the leached ashes might be "clear as it trickled through. She recollected when a little girl of her mother putting her into tin old family mash-tub, which served for a score of years, and telling her how to adjust the bricks and straw in proper fashion. Next she got a great hod and com menced to fill the hogshead with ashes. She worked with such vigor that a tre mendous dust was raised in the back yard. People going past in the street outside sneezed and coughed, and won dered what was going on at Judge Ma notte's place. But Mrs. M. was absorbed in the work of the hour to utter obliviousness of the fact that from the second story of the mansion just across the area from her own, curious and puzzled eyes were fast ened on her and her movements. In her wash-room two kettles set in arches were heating the water to drench the dry ashes. She had to climb into a chair to pour each pailful on to the leech. Cer tainly to unfamiliar eyes, her work might seem strange and mysterious. The Sequin girls, at the chamber window opposite, with tatting and cro chet, could at length contain their sur prise and wonder no longer. " Do let us call mother,"' one of them exclaimed, "and see if she can unriddle he mystery, and tell us the meaning of the operations over in Judge Manotte's back yard." " I think the judge has got a wompn to make some soit of compost for his pear trees," said the other. While the two girls gazed, a stiff pole was plunged into the fuming hogshead, and the mass vigorously punched and shaken b the stout worker. "She is a Hercules," they said. " What muscle those women have. Mrs. Manotte is a worker herself, and she wouldn't hire a woman to sit still." But now the woman disappeared for a while, and when she next came in view he had under her arm nn nugerandaxe, in one hand a smooth billctol'wood, and in the other a huge red hot poker. The two girls gave a little scream at this sight, but the worker heard it not, her head enveloped in the black, poke bon net. She proceeded to bore through the billet of wood by means of the llaming poker, while the smoke as it burned its way made a dubious blue cloud about her head. " I declare, things are getting desper ate down there," cried the youngest girl. " I believe some infernal witch-work is going on ; I will have mother called." Mrs. Sequin was summoned. She was a city-bred woman, first and last, and the proceedings in Judge Manotte's back yard were as mysterious to her as to her youns dauehlor.- " What tho woman is doing I don't know," she said, ' but she works with a will. I should like to get her to do our spring cleaning." " It is very likely you can, mother," said the elder daughter. "We will get father to inquire of Judge Manotte about tho woman if, indeed, she is canny." Next there was a hole made by means ot the auger in the lower part of the hogshead, and the bored billet of wood driven soundly in by aid of the axe, vigorously wielded by the woman's lusty arm, and a whittled plug placed in the wooden spigot. " What a great, stout creature," ex claimed Mrs. Sequin. " She handles tools like a man!" Then more boiling water was dashed into the ash-tilled hogshead till it stood seething and full to the very brim. And now all was silent and deserted in Judge Manotte's backyard. In the af ternoon, Mrs. Manotte, richly dressed, was seen holding up her skirts, tip-toeing round the great hogshead, as if in specting the work to see if it had been properly and thoroughly done. At a very early hour th next morn ing the Sequin girls heard noises in the back yard, and sprang from bed to see if the witch was at her work again. Sure enough she was; they beheld a huge kettle swung on a stout pole be tween crotched stakes driven into the earth, and a pile of blazing fagots be neath it " There is her cauldron ; I told you so," said the younger girl. " And look at the pails of black liquid she is pour ing into it, and the foul lumps and bones she is pouring from that greasy cask. An infernal broth that must be she is concocting." "And there is another barrel with the dark liquid dripping through the spigot," said the older one. ." So there is," exclaimed the younger; " when did she fix that? What a vig orous creature! Stie would clean our whole house in twenty-four hours. Let us call lather. He knows most every thing. I'll bet he can tell us wlmt all this means." So Mr. Sequin was brought to look down on the soectacle in Judge Ma notte's backyard. " It beats the witehes in Hecate all hollow," said the two girls in chorus, as their paternal parent entered the room. After quietly surveying the operations below a moment, he burst out laughing. "Why, the woman is making soft soap," hs said ; " that is all ; I have seen my old m nher do it fifty times when I was a boy on the home farm ; and that woman understands her business, too. I declare I'll have her make up our ashes. Soft soap is better for a hundred purposes in a family than all your patent cleaners found at stores." " I wish you would, father," said the younger daughter, "for it is firsUrate fun to see h .r work; but what is she throwing old bones into the kettle for?" "That is the grease; the Ive will eat them all up. She has got a keg lull of scraps. The result will be a barrel of good strong soft soap. Mrs. Manotte is a prudent woman. She was country raised ; her mother taught her to save meat scraps for soap grease, no doubt. This js the way all farmers do, and make their own soap." " But Mrs Manotte need not have done this, as she is rich," said Mrs. S. " Yes. and always -means to be," said Mr. Sequin. " You know she does her housework when she might have a dozen waiters if she wanted them. Now she has found a hand to work up her ashes into soap." " Mrs. Manotte is rather an odd wo man," remarked Mr. Sequin. "I don't think the judge is quite pleased with some of her ways." Three days after Mrs. Manotte an nounced her intention of making soap, she called her husband to see the result, which was a hogshead of rich brown liquid, smooth and thick, exhaling a clean, alkaline odor, as it stood in a sunny nook of the back yard. Tho judge gazed at it solemnly as his wife extolled its virtues and spoke exult ingly of the " good luck " which had at tended her efforts. " As we burn the best of wood tho ashes were stri ng enough without pot ash, which makes soap biting and harsh. I added a strong solution of borax, which will render it softer for the hands, and also increase its cleansing proper ties." "How much do you call it worth?" asked the judge. " I do not purpose to sell it," said the wife, "so you will not have the pleas ure of peddling it out; but it will last two years, and save forty or fifty dol lars' "Is it possible!" exclaimed the judge, with a humorous twinkle in the corner of his eye. " I am lost in admir ation and amazement of this achieve ment. Couid I ever have Imagined I should have a soap-maker for a wife?" Mrs. Manotte laughed; she knew the judge was rather pleased after all. Though hjs wife dismayed and almost shocked his propriety sometimes, he had a certain quiet r ride in her prowess, llo never knew her to make an essay which ended in defeat: nothing she at tempted "fell through.'? If she could plan, she could also execute. A few days later, as the judge was walking home to dinner, he was aciosted by Mr. Squine. 'Judge Manotte, will you have the kindness to give me the name of your soft-soap woman ? Our folks accident ally saw her at work in your back yard, and we want to employ her to make up our ashes. She is a splendid worker such activity and strength, vou don't find many such in these days' The judge was aghast at first, but he soon rallied, and said : " I will send her to you to-morrow morning, if you would like," and Mr. Sequin went home to tell his wife, " Judge Manotte's soap woman will be on hand with the morrow." The judge merely remarked to his wife at the dinner table that Mrs. Sequin wished her to call at her house, next morning, and Mrs. Manotte thought nothing strange of this. The ladies were acquainted, and attended the same church. Accordingly Mrs. Manotte made ready at the time specified. The judge's wife was a handsome, stylish woman when dressed. Asshe approach ed the door of her neighbor she noticed the front part of the house had a decid edly shut up appearance, and she had to ring once and again for admittance. Within the two girls were " peeping," and beheld Mrs. Manotte, " dressed so grand " on the front step. " How strange she should cal at such iui unseasonable hour, they said, "I never knew her to do tints before, and wlien we are all in our worst clothes, wilh the parlors shut up, expecting tho soap woman. It is too bad ; how can we let her in ?" But tho bell rung again rather per emptorily, Mrs. Manotte saying to her self, "As they sent for me and I have been at Home trouble to call at this hour, why do they keep me waiting for en trance in this unseemly style?" "I must let her in," said Mrs. Sequin, " or she may take ou"cnc., and Mrs. Ma nolte is loo good a friend to lose, though it is strange she should call at such an untimely hour. Something particular may bring her." So a blind was hastily opened in the parlor and Mrs. Manotte admitted, while Mrs. Sequin excused delay by saying they had some unusual work claiming their attention that morning, and told the girls aside if the soap woman came to show her the ashes and scraps in the area and set her to work at once. Then she returned to the parlor with Mrs. Manotte, who was unaccount ably silent and rather stiff at length, as she asked : "Was there anything particulur you wished, Mrs. Sequin?" and that lady answered, "Oh, no, Mra. Manotte," as she bowed her visitor out. Mrs. M. walked homeward feeling rather vexed. "I thought you said Mrs. Sequin wished to see me." she remarked to tho judge in the evening. " So Mr. Sequin informed me," was the response, " then she did not see fit to employ you?" "Employ me?" echoed Mrs. Manott", but the judge was inscrutable. The very next day Mr. Sequin sought out the judge and said: "Tour soap woman did not come yesterday; just tell me her whereabouts, if you 'please, that I may seek her out." " The boap-woman has informed me that she went to your house yesterday morning, but your wife did not say any thing about wishing her services; I be ieve virtually declined them." 'It is not so," said Mr. Sequin, "I fear the woman is not to be relied on." "I never knew her to break her word; she is rather a wilful woman, but by no means an untruthful one," the judge said, with that sly twinkle in his eye which his neighbor had learned carried a meaning of its own. Mr. Sequin went home and asked his wife if 6he had had any callers yester day? "Only Mrs. Manotte," was the an swer. " and she came before nine o'clock in the morning; I never knew her to call at such an unseasonable hour be fore. I thought something special had brought her. but she did no errand." Mr. Sequin roared. "Why, she was the soap-woman, wife," he said. Then ne related what Judge Manotte had just been paying to him and it seem ed plain. The judge had played a prac tical joke on his wife, he was fond of such, but they were never instigated by a malicious or vindictive spirit. She proved herself a match for him in this instance. One day at an hour when the streets were fullest of people, she asked her husband if he would "take some thing to Mrs. Seguin for her?" and he signified his readiness to do so. " What is it?" he asked. "Yon will find it od the area steps," she answered, quietly. It was two buckets of soap ! His word was given, and he kept it, as a man of honor and a "judge " should do. So lie came within one of being a soft soap peddler. Imitation Jewelry. Some of the imitations are admirable, it must be owned. A gold wafh case, eighteen carats tine, costs fifty dollars; another, fourteen carats fine, can be bought for half tho money ; and a third, four carats fine for ten dollars; and nothing' but comparison reveals any difference between the three to inexpe rienced eyes. Bracelets in gold plate finished in a dozen different ways, bur nished, fretted, or faceted, cost less than those of real tortoise shell, and would deceive anybody when worn. Lace pins, cuff pins, rings and earrings are made at Attleboro: in Providence, and New York, in the same patterns used by the best jewelers, and, although not so well finished in minor detail, have no imperfections that can reveal them selves to ordinary inspection. Until very lately it was impossible to make the variegated leaves used on lace in any thing but'ood gold, bnfc they are now produced in cheap alloys, and a method has been discovered for applying enamel to inferior gold. In many cases, the stones used in the cheap sets are real ; fine mosaics, am. tliysts of great clearness, and excellent onyxes being set in gold of a quality so ?oor that a whole set costs very little, n other cases, even the stones are false, and one enn buy a sot of what seem to be initial onyx sleeve buttons set in goldfor less than it would cost to cut the stones if they were real. Second quality onyx, having the upper layer of uneven tuick ness is used in so je of the cheap seals, and in others a blood stone is placed on one side and a bit of glass on the other. The seller who means to cheat is enthu siastic over the beauties of the real blood stone, and the innocent buyer does not think to ask about the glass. Still another deceit is seen in large seals of pressed glass, apparently cut elaborately, but really representing no more work than a pressed glass tumbler; a micro scope would betray the cheat at once, but ordinnry buyers do not go about armed with microscopes, and do not wish toheohliced to do so. Diamond pins with solid backs are of doubtful perfection always, but some of the new pins have a pit of silver foil set behind the fragment of glittering glass that serves for a stone, and are "more deeep tive than the dull stones worn by some men who seem to think that they will be respected if they appear to have spent three years' salary on an ornament. As has been said, there is no way of distinguishing between good and cheap jewelry when worn, but there are a few details to which buyers should look sharply, unless they have perfect confi dence in the house with which they are dealing. Watch cases usually have the name of the firm selling them engraven on the inside, unless they are of poor quality. Good bracelets: are as well fin ished close to the hinges as anywhere else. Fine brooches Jiave good strong pins on tho wrong side. Engraved or tooled surfaces are more deeply! indent ed in gold jewelry than in that which is plated, and burnished surfaces on cheap goods are likely to be scratched, because they are more carelessly kept than those which are more expensive. There is a very slight difference in the color of the two classes of jewelry, but it only re veals itself on comparison. Large size is a danger signal in earrings, and false diamonds ought to warn anybody from buying by their setting. The demand for the cheap jewelry in creases almost daily, many of tho new styles being so fantastic that even those who are determined to wear them hesi tate about paying much for them, pur chase them in cheap materials and throw them away when tarnished. This course is expensive, but if a man or woman can afford it nobody is injured by it except the person who yields to the desire to as sume the appearance of wealth that he has not. But nobody wants to be elicit ed, and he who buys cheap jewelry of ir responsible persons is tolerably sure to waste his money . Boston Transcript. A Bird that Cries "Fa, Pa, Pa!" Let me tell you about some qieer birds that I saw in South Africa. They are called " Hadeda" by the natives, and are as large as crows, with long legs and bills, and wings that are dark-green in one light and golden in another. The birds look like gentlemen in dress suits with their hands folded undertheir coat tails. Tho hadeda lives in marshy places, but they are easily tamed to live in houses, and soon go in and out as if they were part of the family. And, indeed, you might almost think they were part ot it, for, when they cry, they say " Pa, pa. pa!" quickly, like an impatient child. Two of these birds that I saw were very fond of the father of the family, and would follow him about all day. On Sundays they would even walk after him into church unless he locked them up at home. Once they actually did walk into church, marching gravely up the aisle, and taking their stand near their master, who was the minister,-behind the little lectern or reading-desk. It was very funny to see these three solemn figures standing there, and it was lucky the birds did not think to call out "Pa, pa, pa!" just then, for the congregation laughed quite enough as it was. The birds wouldn't go away, although the minister told them to in a severe tone ; so he had to walk out, and they followed him into the open air. When he came in again he shut the door close behind him and so kept them out. M. Enanda, in St. Nicholas. The Inhospitable Family. The other day a genuine tramp with a sloruach yearning lor a picked-up meal undertook to enter a yard on Winder street. A large, fierce dog stood at the gate to give him a hostile welcome, and after vainly trying to propitiate the ani mal the tramp called to a lad of ten who was making a kite on the veranda: "Hey, sonny!" " Yes, I'm hay." was the reply. "Say, bub, call offyer dog." "No use eo use," replied the lad. " Even if you got in here ma's waiting at the kitchen with a kettle of hot water, Sarah's working the telephone to git the police, and I'm hero to holler murder!' and wake up tho whole street." Free Frew. The midnight marauder should Lot be ban ished lrom our dwelling any mors quickly than should a cough or oold oi any kind be driven from the system. Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup quietly yet positively places all oolds under its control. Price 25 cents. FOB THE FAIR SEX. Fashions ol the Season. Bonnets. The bonnets now being made are taken from nearly all periods, and include all shapes, from the baby bonnet to the broad, flaring brimmed hat. From this it will be seen that there is no particular fashion for hats. Every lady can wear what best suits her taste, or her purse, and is most be coming. Nearly all bonnets have broad ribbon tie strings; some are brocaded, mixed with gold or silver; others plain and flowered stripes ; and still others of satin, striped with Persian figured silk. Birds and feathers are used in enormous quantities. Owls, parrots, pigeons and even the little sparrows are not dis carded. The latter dye easily and make a very pretty trimming. Small feathers of the most common kind of fowl are Eurchased in great quantities, dyed rown, black or in bright colors, are sewed separately on large piece of thin cloth, and made into elegant feather bonnets. A black cottage bonnet is made entirely of small black feathers studded with black beads, trimmed with a cluster of black tips and black lace embroidered with jets ; broad striped tie strings of plain atid brocaded satin. The crowns of many of tho bonnets are embroidered in variegated beads, jets and silk, in many fanciful sh pes and figures. Patterns for these embroidered crowns and fronts can be obtained, and ladies can easily make thoir own bon nets. The newest style is to have the strings at the top of the crown and fas tened at the side with ome such orna ment such as a bird's head or an arrow of jet or steel. Face trimming is not used, all brims being simply lined with pl iin or shirred Satin or velvet. Many of them are edged with gold braid. Children's Gakments. Garments for children are becoming more and more simple. A paletot of stone-colored cashmere with a plaiting of silk in the back, the same shade, wili serve both as a dress, and with the addition of a can ton flannel underwaist as nn outside wrap ; it is made long, loose and com fortable. Others of dark plaid material, gabrielle shape, with two narrow plait in gs at the bottom headed with narrow ribbon velvet. A pretty outside gar ment for a child is made of light blue cashmere ; the front loose and of square shape, over which are short cutaway fronts. The back is a very long plain waist, to which the skirt is attached in kilt plaits, finished with a broad blue sash of light blue silk, raveled out at the ends. The fronts .ire trimmed with a mixed galloon, cream and gilt. The garment is double-breasted nnd fasten ed with large pearl-white buttons. Stheet Dkesses. Street dresses are the same as they were last season ; are made short. Some are made without a vestige of trimming on the underskirt, and the overskirts are simply stitched around the bottom. The plain pointed basques are stylish, and have fewer seams in the back than they formerly .had. Overskirts are made full across the hips. The latest are opened in front. Mixed fabrics of silk and wool, flowered and plain stripes and palm-leaf cloth, will be much used this season for dress trimming. The serviceable black silk is brightened and made more dressy by the addition of vests, cuffs nnd revers of brocaded silks in colors of old gold, blue rolkadot, crimson and torquoise blue, n combination with such colors an old black silk can be made to look fresh and new. Firms. Very simple nnd plainly trimmed dresses may be made quite stylish for evening by simply adding a fichu. Those are made in various shapes and of different material. For elderly ladies there is the black net, em broidered with colored siik, vest shape, with ruflles of kilted Spanish lace in tho inside, forming a square shaped neck. Many handsome ones are of the same shape, with white lisse and plaitingsof Breton lace, one inside, the other re lieved with loops of colored satin. More simple ones are made of India mull, cut in tho shape of half a square, the ends extending to the belt, trimmed with two rows of Valenciennes. Stockings. Stocking.i are profusely embroidered. Many ladies embroider their own, buying stockings of a solid color and embroidering them in differ ent colors to match the dress. Much spare- timo can be very pleasantly em ployed in this way. In fact, if young ladies will simply undertake to consult ineir own tastes and gratify them with their own handiwork they will be sur prised at the increasing pleasure this will afford and the economy it will stimulate. New York Fa&hion Letter. House Cleaning. Beds should bo cleaned, mattresses sunned and bed clothing aired. Win ter clothing and blankets, which have been paoked away for the summer, should bo taken out, examined and well aired. Where carpets have been on the floor all summer, thorough sweeping is all that is required to clean them. For this a carpet brush is better than a broom and a patent carnet sweener than either. The carpet sweeper, how ever, will not go into the corners of tho room and these must be cleaned w .th brush and dustpan. This troublsome corner brushing is obviated by tho modern fashion of leaving a strip of stained floor around the edge of the carpet. Where the floors are covered with matting it is generally agreed to be wisest to leave the matting down and put the carpetoverit. The matting keeps better on the floor than if taken up and stored away, and at the same time helps to preserve the carpet. Two thicknesses of paper should be laid be tween them. Newspapers will answer for this purpose, but common brown wrapping paper,such as grocers ute, is still better, on account of its absorbent qualities. When it is used the mat ting will usually be found much cleaner the next spring after the carpet is taken up tli an when it was laid down. For cleaning matting, damp corn meal or wneat bran sprinkled over it and then swept off is excellent. Soap should never be used on matting, it yellows it badly. When the mattinir is so dirtv s to require washing, salt water will be iound much better lor the purpose. Every one knows how iron oastors on furniture stain straw matting. There is nothing which will remove the Rtain without injury, but they may be pre- veniea Dy placing tiny round mats of straw coarse crochet cotton under each roller. When depressions occur in the matting an extra thickness of paper must be put, in order to prevent the carpet from wearing off in that spot. The new patent tacks for matting, made in the form of small stanles. are mnr h hnttr than the old style. When a breadth of uuuung is to re piercea turn both pieces under for three or four inches and over seam together on the wrong side. I neatly done the join whl be scarcely ap parent. Carpets which have been laid away during the summer should be closely ex amined for moths and well swept before putting flown. Ingrain carpets may be neatly mended by slipping a patch under, taking care that the figures match, and pasting carpet and patch to gether with stiff flour paste. Clothes which are to be laid away for the winter should bo washed and rough dried, but not starched, since the starch has a tendency not only to yellow white cloth, but to rot it as well. To preserve the color they should be slightly blued. Mice are apt to cut white clothes and calicoes when laid away in a closet to which they have access, especially if any starch is loft in them. Grenadines, buntings and summer woolens which will not be needed in cold weather, should be packed in trunks with cam phor to preserve them from moths, which, in a warm house, are frequently as active in winter as in summer. The English custom of laying sprigs of lavender, or dried rose leaves among linen is an exceedingly fine one. Phila delphia Times. The Story or the ' Resolute." Never before, says a New York paper, was there a vessel that had a more wondrous record than the old Arctic exploring ship Resolute, from the tim bers of which a piece of furniture is to be made for Mrs. Henry Grinnell, of this city. Early in 1854 a court-martial sat at Sheerness, England, to inquire into the abandonment, on Sir Edward Belcher's Arctic expedition, of the In vestigator, the Resolute and the As sistance. These vessels, with two others, had been sent forth to search for the lamented Franklin and his devoted com panions, and their three captains, Bel cher, Kellett and McClure. had been obliged to return, not only witli no news of the missing explorer, but without bringing back their ships. The Resolute, a stalwart and powerful sailing-craft, had passed through many tlifficultis, when she was finally fastened in the floes of Melville sound, and believing that she could never get away again, Sir Edward gave orders reluctantly to abandon the ship. Tho crew made everything snug below and aloft; then, one May day, in 1854, bade adieu to their floating home, and returned safely with their fellows to England. One morning of summer, off the Labrador coast, an American whaler named Hartstein spied abark-rigged ship, strangely silent, lying aground. Ho bordered her, and found everything in perfect order ; every brace trimmed, every rope coiled, with colors flying at the mizen peak, but not a soul on board. Presently he discovered that this was the Resolute. She had drifted for over 1,000 miles without starting a rope, from Melville island through Bar rows straits, through Lancaster sound, round by Cape Liverpool, past Pond's bus, down Davis' straits, to the shoals of Labrador. The ice had melted, the floes had opened, currents had taken charge of her, and the lonely ship, with none but the forces of the sea for her pilot, and only invisible hands on her wheel, had floated safely nnd soundly past all the reefs and rocks which stud so long a course, until such time as thiB "seafarinsr man" made her out. He brought this abandoned British vessel into Boston harbor as sound as on the day when she started from England. Our government behaved nobly about the Resolute. We paid Hart-stein his salvage out of tho treasury. Then the Wa3iiington authorities set riggers and ship-painters to work upon her, tidied her up inside and outside, and then sent her ncross the Atlantic under an emi nent officer, with the English flag at the main nnd the stars and stripes aft, with the compliments ol " Uncle Sam " to her Britannic, majesty. The people of Eng land were greatly pleased by this act oi generosity on our part, and Queen Vic toria went herself on board to receive from our officers her ship, for which she thanked them most sincerely. It is a pity that this old wanderer should have to be broken up; but it is eminently proper that some sort of a memento should come out of her timbers to the widow ot the American gemtleman who, at great expense, searched so often for Sir John Fwwklin. A Remarkable Suicide. A'uother remarkable suicide has taken place in Russia. AJ Nihilist of wide prominence at Odessa and a former student at the university, was recently arrested and thrown into a jail, where ho suffered so much from the filthy state of his cell that he burnt himself to death rather than endure the torture any longer. Though he had been in the cell many months, it had not once been cleaned, aud so vile were tho odors given out by the accumulated refuse that he complained of suffocation, ciddiness and fainting fits. He begged the keeper to clean the place or urge on Iris trial, but to no purpose. Still lie implored for re lief, and ut last the governor of the jail, wearied with his appeals, ordered severe corporal pnnishment to be inflicted upon him and that his hands be tied behind his back witli a stout rope. In that condition, and smarting from the blows ho had received, lie was left alone stretched out on the sloping hoards. That constituted his only bed. He was able after a struggle to get into a sitting position, and there contrived wilh his teeth to bite a hole through the glass which contained the ril in a burning lamp on a bracket above his head. The oil soon cav.ght tire, and the prisoner allowed it to run down over his body, setting his clothes on tire. Without a cry or a groa.i he lay down in the flames to die. Soon the odor of his burning flesh brought' oinoers to las cell, now filled with black smoke and flames. Not a word did tho prisoner utter, but nxed ins eyes coldly on the keepers while they put out the fire. He assured the officers lie should have been content to die on the scaffold for the sake of his opinions, but that the inhuman tortures of his cell he was unable longer to en dure. His body at the surface had been entirely carbonized, but he lived three and a half hours after the flames were extinguished. A Philadelphia firm appends the fol lowing notice to its advertisements " N. B Customers from the country, purchasing $5 worth ol goods from us will be furnished with dinner on stat ing they saw this advertisement." This is a serious blow to the chromo business, as the country customer will not hesi tate to choose ice-cream and pie in pref erence to chromos. Foster. Let everything be taken at its face value and men with cheeks of brass would not go for much. Picayune. In the Last Tew. She sits, bent o'er, with wrinkled faoe, Poor and forlorn'y old ; no graoe Smooths the sharp angles of her iorm, Long buffeted by life's slow storm. All else around is fine afcd fair; The stained light falls, a golden glare, In seeming mockery on her loose, gray halt. The preacher, faultlessly arrayed, Tells how our hearts alar have strayed, And how all souls should be content ' With those good blessings God has sent. And one, of all that sell-poised throng, Hnngs on his words nor deems them long, And humbly thinks only her heart is wrong. She meekly mumbles o'er the hymn, Her eyes with age and tear-drops dim; What can their gay world hold lor her Tbis worn and weary worshiper? Now, rustling down the aisles in pride, They toss bright smiles on every side, Nor does she know the hurts suoh lair looks hido. And still she sits, with tear-wet face, As loath to leave that saored place j The organ, with quick thunders riven, Lilts her sad, trembling soul to heaven ; j 3 She feels a sense of blissful rest, Her bony hands across her breast She clasps, and lowly sighs: "God knoweth best!" One day, within some grander gate Where kings and ministers must wait, While the hopes humbly lor low place Far lrom the dear Lord's shining faoe, Above the chant ot heavenly ohotr These words may sound, with gracious fires " Well done, good, faithlul servant, come np higher!" C. M. A. Wintlow, n Good Company. ITEMS OF INTEREST Griswold calls a sick man an ill-looking fellow. There are more than S,0o0 retail cigar stores in New York city. The champion State for divorce suits The matrimonial state. Cincinnati has a new paper devoted to the interests of lame animals. Queen Victoria reads the great papers of London every day before noon. One touch of nature When you ge your nose frost-bitten. New York News In the United States theie is one newspaper in every 5,660 of the inhabit ants. One weekly newspaper in England has reached the enormous circulation of more than 600,000. Vice is a monster of such hideous mien, he who adopts it must be mon strous green. Bvffalo Express. Compositors are the most gentlemanly and seli-contained of men. They neve want a finger in the pi. New York Mail. " I should like to see that gold mine," said Smythekins, as he watched them counting quarter-eagles in the treasury. New York Mail. , When he is twenty-one the boy is sup posed to have outgrown the switch, but that is just the age when tne girl begins to need one. New York Star. The man who knows just how a newspaper ought to be run is always ready to back up his convictions with capital talk. New York People. " When freedom from her mountain height, TJnlurlcd her standard to the air," She saw a woman's hat the sight Made freedom sneak away and sweare. Toronto lJrapmc. A rural editor has lost faith in the luck of horseshoes. He nailed one over his door recently, nnd that morning there came by mail three duns and seven stops and a man called with a revolver to ask " who wrote that article?" Meri den Recorder. A workman on the railroad at Flor ence, Itajy, was run over and killed. His sweetheart laid herself on the track to die in the same manner, but the train only injured an arm, which was subse quently amputated. Still determined on suicide, she tore of the bandage and bled to death. A conscientious, observing daily news paper man has perhaps a better oppor tunity for studying human nature than falls to tho life of most any other profes sional, for the reason, if for none other, that men expose their weaknesses in a newspaper othce, whereas they would hide them in the presence of a lawyer, a physician or aclcrgyman. CamdenPost. Young man, don't swear. Swearing never wns good for a sore finger. It never cured the rheumatism nor helped draw a prize in a lottery. It isn't re commended for liver complaint. It isn tsure against liirhtninnr. sewing ma chine ngents, nor any of the ills which beset people through lifo. There is no oecafion for swearing outside of a news Daner office, where it is useful in proof reading an 4 indispensably necessary in getting forms to press, it has been known, also, to materially assist the editor in looking over the paper after it is printed. But", otherwise, it is a very foolish and wicked nabit. Wastongton Republic, k Yonng Marksman's Feats. Captain Bogardus. champion glass ball and rdgeon shot, gave an exhibition at bt. raui, Minn. Alter ti c captain had finished. Eugene, his fourteen-vear- old son, took the stand, nnd for nearly nan an hour neiu the audience in breath less attention. Euirene is a youthful prodigy, says the Qlobf. For one so young liis feats have never been equaled. With his little rifle, resembling more a toy firearm than a dealh-dealing instru ment, ho astonished the lookers-on by breaking forty-seven out of fifty glass balls thrown into the air, besides many other odd and difficult feats. When Dr. Carver gave his exhibition at the fair grounds, last season, neople looked upon them as remarkable and wonder ful. But now comes a mere youth, who, almost with a toy rifle, does equally, if not more, difficult feats. Carver used a large rifle, of which Eugene's is but a minature copy. Eugene's shooting re cord yesterday is ahead of anvtintr Dr. Carver has done. Despite a strong wind, he not only showed himself able to break glass balls, but to hit half dollars, quar ters, marbles, nickels, and evrn three-cent-pier s. His quiet, impassive, re tiring demeanor is also a matter of wo. derment. Apparently unconscious ot' performing any extraordinary feat, I 6 continues to load and fire his little piec, in no way elated at his success. Eugett is certaiuly a prodigy, and will, no doubr, astonish the world with still more re markable performances in his line. I t r